Quite frankly for the first time
since 2005, I was not impressed at all by Mr. Saad Al Hariri's recent shocking
and non Lebanese rhetoric, tone and
stances.
In his TV interview with Paula Yacoubian, (Future TV) on Monday 20/01/14, he was
not himself, but confused,
perplexed, some what childish and apparently not well prepared in advance to
deal with the complex questions.
He sounded hostile at time which is not his
nature and was not open, receptive or appreciative to those who criticized his
sudden Saudi imposed appeasements to Hezbollah, especially from his own
Future Movement.
He could not rationally or logically explain his last bizarre
statements in regards to his willingness for sharing the criminals and
terrorists of Hezbollah in a new Lebanese government.
For the first time I did
not sense his usual transparency, innocence, honesty or sincerity, as I used to
previously.
Meanwhile all the junk and unconvincing excuses that he used to
justify his sudden willingness to sleep in the same bed with Hezbollah were bogus
and not persuasive at all.
It was very clear from the bitterness of his
rhetoric, tone and confusion that his decision making process is not totally in
his hands.
Hariri this time disappointed me and made me doubt very much that he
is qualified to be where he is.
I hope I am mistaken in my interpretation of the
contents of his very superficial and disappointing interview.
Apparently it seems he is for sure going to share the criminals of
Hezbollah in the new government that is in preparation after shamelessly licking
all his previous promises and vows.
In conclusion, we strongly believe that Hariri is committing a fatal national
and patriotic mistake by
succumbing to the Saudis and giving the criminal Hezbollah the legitimacy not
only to continue its barbaric Iranian occupation of Lebanon and killing its
patriotic leaders one after the other boldly and with cold blood, but also and
most importantly to go on fighting the Syrian people and support the Butcher Bachar
Al Assad to remain in power.

Background
Hariri: Cabinet initiative aims to safeguard Lebanon January 21, 2014/By Hussein Dakroub The Daily Star
BEIRUT: Former Prime Minister Saad Hariri said Monday he was driven by his
worries about Lebanon drifting into instability to join Hezbollah in a coalition
government with the aim of containing a long-simmering political conflict after
the March 8 coalition backtracked on its demand for veto power. He also said the
March 14 coalition, led by his Future Movement, would nominate a candidate from
its ranks to run in the presidential election, scheduled for May, thus
dismissing the possibility of a neutral or centrist candidate. In a wide-ranging
interview with Future TV, Hariri said Hezbollah and its March 8 allies would not
have veto power in a new Cabinet, and pledged not to compromise over the Future
Movement’s rejection of the party’s tripartite defense formula of the Army, the
people and the resistance.” He spoke days after attending in The Hague the
Special Tribunal for Lebanon’s trial in absentia of four Hezbollah members
indicted in the 2005 assassination of his father, former Prime Minister Rafik
Hariri.
“What happened in The Hague is a very big issue that might cause a major problem
in the country. Do I act with my heart only or with mind? Therefore, I have said
there are deep-rooted differences with the March 8 side, particularly with
Hezbollah,” Hariri said in the interview conducted at his residence in Paris. He
cited three major contentious issues with Hezbollah: the party’s military
intervention in Syria on the side of President Bashar Assad’s forces, the
party’s arsenal and its protection of the suspects involved in his father’s
assassination. Hezbollah has refused to hand over five party members suspected
of involvement in Hariri’s killing.
Hariri scoffed at charges that his agreement to share power with Hezbollah in a
coalition government was designed to cover the party’s military involvement in
Syria. “We definitely will not cover Hezbollah’s participation in Syria. This
participation brought fire to Lebanon,” he said.“We are against a blocking third
[veto power]. We support the rotation [of ministerial portfolios]. I reject
outright the tripartite formula and I will never compromise on this matter,”
Hariri added.
He said he supported the Baabda Declaration, which calls for distancing Lebanon
from regional and international conflicts, particularly the conflict in Syria,
to replace the tripartite formula in the Cabinet’s policy statement.
Hariri’s remarks come amid rising hopes that a new Cabinet based on an 8-8-8
lineup could be formed this week, ending a 10-month-old deadlock. “The new
Cabinet will serve for two, three or four months until a new president is
elected,” he said, adding that he had to reciprocate the March 8 alliance’s
retreat from its demand for a 9-9-6 Cabinet in which the March 8 and March 14
camps would be granted veto power.
Referring to the wave of car bombings that struck Beirut, the southern suburbs
and the northern city of Tripoli recently, incidents directly linked to the war
in Syria, Hariri said: “The people want a government. The country can no longer
endure because of the tense situation. My duty is to find an equation to emerge
from the painful situation ... We want to halt the collapse.”“Participation
[with Hezbollah] in the government [is designed] to contain the conflict, even
though Hezbollah did not withdraw from Syria and put the differences at the
Cabinet table,” he said. “We are proceeding positively and they [March 8] also
say the same ... I am trying to find a window to pull the country out of this
predicament.” “Today, a glimmer of hope emerged over the Cabinet formation even
though there are major differences between us and them [March 8],” Hariri said.
“For us, we enter the Cabinet to contain the conflict at the Cabinet table, but
at the same time we want to care for the people’s interests.” Hariri also denied
he was abandoning his allies in the March 14 camp and moving toward a four-way
ruling political alliance made up of Hezbollah, Amal, the Progressive Socialist
Party and his Future Movement. “We have an open dialogue with our allies [in the
March 14 alliance] in which we inform them of the steps we are taking and the
reasons behind them,” he said. “Only death can separate me from my allies in the
March 14 coalition.” While stressing the strong bonds between him and
Lebanese Forces chief Samir Geagea, Hariri urged his longtime ally to reconsider
his stance over the Cabinet formation. “I urge Samir Geagea to reconsider his
position on this issue [the Cabinet] because we all have our concerns,” he said.
“But no one should think that I will abandon Samir Geagea or vice versa, and our
position is the same.” In an interview with France’s Europe1 radio station
earlier Monday, Hariri said Assad had most likely given the order for the
assassination of his father. He also said he would return to Lebanon for the
parliamentary elections scheduled in November. Hariri also reiterated his
accusation that Assad was behind the assassination of former Minister Mohammad
Shatah in Beirut in December.
Asked why international justice was a long process, Hariri said: “Because over a
period of 50 years there was impunity in Lebanon. This is the first time that
the international community has established a process of justice for Lebanon, in
the Arab world, in order to end political assassinations.”“Justice never forgets
or forgives. I want justice, not to forgive or forget.”